Maxims ol a Mere Marl Ilnouglihsagoodssafeest I'D -2'5 2 TH. PIOPI.If. PAPII Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew 10 PAGEI l Body In Creek Missing Found Murdered TORONTO (CP)-The PIl'f.ialU' decomposed body of eisiit-your-old Judy Carter, missing for 0 disil- was found Saturday lyliis on the sand bank of a creek hi suburban Markham township. . Dr. sinirla Lawsol. supervising , coroner for Ontario. said the girl had been throttled with a beige scarf with two knots in it. He said an autopsy Sunday revealed no other signs of violence. "The motive for the, killing wasn't rape and it wasn't rob- bery." he said. Judy's body was identified by her parents. Mr. and Mrs. William MacLeod in the Tor- nntn morgue Saturday night shortly after it was found by two boys. The youngsters. 13-year-old Ken- neth Ollphant and 12-year-old Eric Cristensen of Markham township, were setting out for a day's fish- lng. N0 CLUE5 FOUND Dr. Lawson said the autopsy showed there was no water in the girl's lungs and that she had been killed before being dumped into the water. He said the girl's clothes were intact. The only marks on her body were bruises around her neck where the scarf had been twisted. Sensational Advance In Potato Prices Recently Noted By Board Chairman ”Thc potato markets all over Child Inspector William Mace. who di- rected the search for the grade two student. said no clues were found at the scene, approximately 17 miles northeast of where little Judy vanished Feb. 25. He said 20 policemen combed the area Sun- day looking for clues. He said the body had apparently been washed up on the sand bank. about 10 yards from shore. It was unlikely that the body had been dumped into the tiny creek from a bridge a short distance upstream near N0. 7 highway because there werie no signs of abrasions or cuts on t. READ COMICS The girl was last seen alive less than 400 yards from her home. She was then on her way home from a playmate's house where she had been reading comics with two friends. She had gone there after attending school. The disappearance of the little girl and the fear that she was the victim of s sex deviate set in mo- tion one of the most intensive searches in the Toronto police force's history. For days squads of police worked round-the-clock on the case. Reward money totalling 31,500 was posted for information concerning her whereabouts. .ranged all the way from 52.00 to ST. HILAIRE. Que. (CP)AThe men and women of St. Hiisire knelt in prayer Sunday in the little village church to give thanks for the ending of the siege that locked their village in isolation for 19 wintry days. It was the happiest Easter in ears. A giant bulldozer ended the siege Saturday when it plowed through towering drifts to cut a path through to the hunger-threat- ened village. The arrival of the bulldozer and jeep convoys loaded with supplies lifted the threat from the 265 vil- lagers of this Frontenac county community 75 miles south of Que- bec. Farmers who were on short ra- tions were considering butchering their hungry cattle when the relief came. Easter dawned sunny and warm and villagers and farmers from the outskirts thronged the church for mass. The hero of "the siege" was the village priest. Rev. Armand Ger- main. who sent out the first call for help and shared his food sup- plies with his parishioners. He left later Sunday to visit a brother in Louisiana but his des- tination w a s not immediately known. He was accompanied by Giant Bulldozer Cuts Path To Quebec' Village To End Hunger Threat WN, CANADA. MONDAY, APRIL IL 1955 except on snow-. lmpossible. Food reserves vanished. feed for an- imals became scarce. and the threat of famine settled on St, Hllalre. l PATH CLEARED As the days went by mothers with eight, nine. 10 or more chil- dren, many with husbands work-. ing in the bush. looked more and more toward their parish priest. . Thursday, more than two weeks after the big storm. his house- keeper telephoned a Quebec radio station on behalf of the priest and the relief operation began, Contractor Henri - Paul Gilbert that all travel. shoes, became Fishermen Reach Shore After Rowing Three Day HALIFAX (CPl-The five drew La Tour Friday from an expedi- anil Rog ll arrived ashore safely banks. Sunday night after rowing for- Search and rescue sent three days. Lancaster 11 cm Greenwood They landed at Ste. Catherinesibase Saturday to join the fishingl river. about 20 miles from Liver-lboals Linda and Judy and AH pool. N.S., and 60 miles from beria Rose and the fisheries ves-i their homes at Port La Tour. sel Harangue from Shelburne in The lrma ann Hog ueiit down the hunt. quietly and inexplicably Friday Part of Mrs, Hai.lield'a predic- morning. She began Illllllg Wlmltion about the ship's fate proved water and the men barely had Huey lsll:'e'es:lkla”"Ch lhelr dwy bdorel She said before the men were lhey ilad no food or water, and ileum? mm, she win convmced lie! one man, Gram Low, 48' went lush.-ind was not aboard the ship. blind during the hard row to the; lie WW” have Wed ""3 l”"35 lonely beach. it is thought his iosslmdm W let us WOW P9 W35 3” of sight is only temporary. Flglll." Ill! Said- Mrs. Robey Hatfield, wife of the ”lf,he put into port I know he skipper of the 33-foot crail, droveiivould hale called me. I think the Death Saturday l Mr. D. MacKinnon The death occurred in the Char- lottetown Hospital Saturday night sent two bulldozers into action Friday which tunnelled through drifts iii feet high. Arrest Driver of the Island's second oldest I priii-lisin-' attorney. Vlr. Donald Ell Aiacliuilroil. Q-(-'-. In hi; u -- . - He had been ill for olily three HOUSTON (AP)-The FBI an- wce.-'s previous to his pns...it,. nounced Sunday the arrest 0. al The late Mr. Macl(iniiou was truck driver who vanished alter. horn in Brooklyn. P.E.i.. ihe son losing 12 tons of frozen sllrimp in of the late Mr. and Mrs. i.auch- a poker game here. - lin Mac-Kinnon. He attended public George Burton. FBI agent in school and Prince of Wales Coi- ilie 60 miles to St, Callierinelsiship might have caught fire or liver Sunday night to return the.hll Sonlellllllg-" lll('ll in the homes they left last i 'll ' . lli::)da(:'lVEN or HOPE o,""ke5 on -n....;In Philippines l-Larlier Sunday she v. unninn Press she hail given upl nope for the safety of thej lllcll. im so happy, now." she said. fl thought tile) were gone." . Details of the incident were not ll'l1lllClll3li3iy'alHli8lJlf3. REM-' of- ficials, who had a Lancaster MANILA. (AP: - Strung earthquakes early Sunday cracked highways and fright- ened residents of the southern Philippines where a violent earth shock April 1 killed at least 432 persons and left thou- sands homeless. P310! is REPORT EISENHOWER TELLS US FORCES T KEEP GLEAROF FORMDSA AREA FIGHTIN (By Jack Bell) WASHINGTON. (AP)-President Eisenhower is re- ported to have directed American forces to stand clear of fighting that might break out Communist attack. The president is represen in the Formosa area until 5 he can assess the extent and intent of any initial Chinese ted by persons versed in the members of the fishing boat Irma tion along the La Have fishingladmmistrationis Far Eastern pohcies as having informed the Chinese Nationalists they hold the primary respon- Formosa itself. Eisenhower": present vvi-is summed up lllis way' The Nationalist. who have been given the la'.;.: 1 . oi Siillerican lighting equipment short of nu- clear weapons. will be expected to bear alone the initial uirurts of any attack--massive or otherwise! -that develops. There is a strongi feeling within the z:-.lministration; that Clllang Kai-shc'.'x men can handle anything short of an all-out invasion. STAND READY Ailieiu-nil lf)lLCS W-ll.ll(l stand in remlinoss outside the range of haiilc, 'l'llc) lvoillcl not join in the flr.i'! ulilcss dc1il.'ei'alc1y attacked. if Eisenhoiicr decides the Na- tionalists canlt repel the Reds alone, his decision on American infcnvention will be based on the l)r-'l U .S. evaluation of Commun-p lst in'cn”'r.: :" the ll'1'.l). position. . . . . i i l ilic L flllililll is S.llill(l f'lliill,.'e ii: .r p. ".arda line by anlluullc- int: publicly they want only Que-l m iv and the Matsus. Eiscnliowcr p v. aid have to consider world opin- lion and the likely opposition of U. S. allies toward defending the coastal islands under those cir-l Tklsibility for defending not only Quemoy and Matsua but of the fusion type of H-bomb with its lethal fallout over Vt'idP arm- The effort would be to pinpoint military targets with the less pnw- erful atomic weapons. Within administration circles there is some feeling that despite signs of a buildup on the main- land. the Communists may not move against Qiiemoy and '.li.lI-us -cxccpi for small probing attacks. l-Liar,-nhowiir has made it clear in all or-iir'ci'ned that if the L'ni rd Slates goes in. it will be on his decision alone. The president in- tends to stick to his position that he will make no advance commit- mcnts that the United States will or won't join in a defence of Que- moy and the Matsus. It is the feeling in White House circles that any statement the is- lands won't be defended would cause much of free Asia to cave n in the Communists. On the other hand. a publicly an- nounced decision to defend the outposts would start a debate like- ly in split the free world at a critical time. Abandon Search For Canada and the United States 33.50 per 75 pound bag. Now that charge. Sam Ruben W-. Brewen my and for n time mug,” schoollscai-cliiiig the Atlantic along the. , , it hit Lanao province on wmsi.-,nce5, have made sensational advances Easter is over. the next several during the past ten days," said days should give some indication Mr. Donald A. MacDonald. chalr- whether or not these sensational man of the Prince Edward island price advances of the last week Potato Marketing Board last will be maintained or continue." night. "Prices are changing sol . ' Manitoba Rivers rapidly that the potatomtradle has; never seen anything e t be-i fore," Spread Headwaters "The present price splurge was, WINNIPEG, (CF) - Southern touched off by the realization that the frost damage of two: . iswollcn by a sudden spring run- oil. spread their floodwaters over thousands more acres of flat farm? lands during the weekend. The Seine river. a placid sircam during the summer, continued to rise. forcing many river-hank re- sidents to flee. Suburban St. Vital police officials said Sunday the. Seine flood is the worst since 1950. At least four bridges were sub- merged. Water covered the tracks on the Soo line railway bridge but traffic was moving over the span at five miles an hour. In-Winnipeg the Red river stood at 16.3 feet at 7 p.m. CST. 2.3 feeti below minimum flood level. weeks ago in the Southern States. was quite extensive. particularly in Alabama where their 24.000 acres is almost a complete loss." said Mr. MacDonald. The Board chairman stated that the harvesting of the northern Florida crop will start this week and last about a month. While they will have I fair crop and receive very high prices. the big- gest market influence for the moment is the fact that millions of bushels which should normally be harvested in May and early June. from such states as South ;Manitoba's rivers and streams. another brother. a physician. Father Germain said he had only one complaint: his usual Sunday mass attendance had dropped to 35 and 40 from 185 because the people could not struggle through the snow to the church. St. l-iilare has no stores. baker. pr butcher. but a doctor was on hand. delivering two babies dur- ing the shut-in period. The vil- lage's winter life-line is the nine mile road to St. Evariste. Twenty days ago a swirling in Beloxi. Miss. He is charged with unlawfully converting to his own merce. Brewer was en route from Brownsville. Tex., in Detroit. with the shrimp. valued at 312,000. when he lost the cargo in a game with four Houston men last week. The Houston men. charged with receiving and concealing stolen merchandise. are free lmdcr bond. Burton said the Houstonians sold part of the shrimp here and in Beaumont. Tex. He said about 04.- blizzard dumped so' much snow Many Lands By The Canadian Press Christians thronged churches in many lands Sunday to worship in traditional Easter services com- memorating the resurrection of Carolina and 1' ” will not be available this year. realization." he said, "has ell- minated any doubt about the market's ability to absorb all stocks of old potatoes.” As an example of how prices have advanced during the past week. Mr. MacDonald said that on April 2. island 75's were sold as low as s2.7o in Toronto. Sev- eral days later. in spite of the Lester holiday coming up. prices in the vicinity of 34.00 have been paid. ”Spr-culstors have had a field day. Some have made a lot of Wins! in a couple of days on '"'Ck5 "ml they never saw." said Mr. MacDonald, "Prices paid Producers in this Province have & Coming Events m:;Dance. Vernon Hall. April "Ballet. Corran Easter Monday night. lllver b s l I. Ban Hall. "Dance Vernon Tuesday. April 1). "John Gass will make his next lflli. on the cream. April ma. "Dance. Kelly' Cross School, E--fer Monday in. April mil. "Danes St. Andrews Hall. Mt. Itewart. Thursday, April 14, "I f I Cash ”.l-l"k':'.,'"R".lC; Dawson. Albany. COD mu I W333 U Ila OrweA nltolvle hockey testis. Goad nuns, "Ann ai til at Ole Mann. field Haull C':i:l.pa!.! will be in the Hall Tuesday. April uh: I run. - "Dancing - Modern and Old Time. Seven Mile Easter Monday I p. Ill. music. 9- Good c"'A.l;ltI.llIl P Plaiv. . lrwnmaculala one on er s , elilagm 'lT,l::nliaglving Hall. April 11th l ' will be a meetiag of the New ven Liberal poll coin- mittee. s Ritchie McPhee's. ea Tuesday. April lath. " ur and dance. Car aster Monday. April pair I to I p.m. usplces Clrdlsn rin Fighting - eardsartysnd Iastc innew Ieheoirree lunches. Itnsie I7! Snow Mounla M. J. Latourneau, one of . cnersa taln of snow 12 tolmiu Ioddiea: we would love WI! one i ill b. Tunnel in in Village St. Hilaire de Dorset's 85 from tunnel through moun- was used to cross road Churches Thronged 900 worth was recovered. . ,2-4...... , in On Ea s'l e r Cllrist. At Vatican City, the Pope sought to comfort a troubled world by blessing the peaceful uses than the potential of atomic power. He spoke to I crowd estimated at between 300.- 000 aild 500.000 in St. square. .At York. England. Arch- bishop of York, second ranking prelate in the Church of England. said in an Easter sermon "fear and suspicion" are ill? greatest hindcrances to world (lis- armament. "We fear the Russians. the Rus- sians fear us." said the nrchbisllnp Dr. Cyril C-arbett. and probably the Chinese suspect both the Suv- let and the Allies." REMOVE FEAR He called on Christians in re- move fears between nations that might lead to war and use of the by xogen bom'.i. Queen Elizabeth and the Duke of ldinburxtli entertained at a family party at Windsor Castle. Queen Mother Elizabeth and Prin- cess Margaret were there. The Royal Family attended Eas- ter service in St. George's Chapel at the royal estate. During the day more than 30.000 s hisccix: strolled through the grounds. A record crowd of about 2.000.- 000 joined in the Fifth Avenue Easier parade in New York as the city bssked in 77-degree weather. warmest of the year. By contrast. Britain and West- ern Europe had chill weather and the Easter fashion parade along tcontinued on Page 2 col. 3) the rather ilcslructiveness Peter's l thatl 29, surrendered Saturday to police; in me Province helm-e gaming gulsouth shore of Nova Scoiia tori I this City to study law. One of his fellow law-studelits at that time use iiiefcllandlse ill llll-8FSl3l-9 C0m' was Mr. W. E. Bentley. Q.C.. who ences except to say lis the oldest practising lawyer on i the lslzlild. In politics. Mr. lllzichiiinon sup- p0l'lCLl the Conservative Party and was an unsuccessfud candidate for Queen's in the Federal elect- ions of i921 and 1926. A member of Zion Presbyterian Church, he was called to the Session 47 years ago and at the tlnle of his death was senior elder in that church. He also held the office of Clerk of the Session for 23 years and was a valued mem- ber of the choir for over fifty years. A man of quiet disposition he was possessed with a high degree of integrity which made greatly esteemed by his clients anti by all with wlloln he came in coillaci. 'l'hc late Mr. married in the former lde('c:ls('(l him in 1929. i are a son, Laiichlin. and a daught- er Suzanne. both of Charlottetown. 3The funeral will be held tomorrow p afternoon from Zion Church at 2.00 pm. SIBERIAN SHORTCUT . i.0Ni)()N (AP) - Russia has .cimipiclc(i a r a i l w a y shortcut iacross outer Mongolia to Commu- nisi China. Moscow radio said Sat- iirr':iy. flilssinn supplies for China ilntil now traversed the entire trans-Siberian railway to Vladivos- tok. Tiio slioriciit leaves the trans- Sihcrinn nl Uian Udc. then! runs soniliuarrl tn Ulan Bator in Rus- sian Outcr illnnlzolin. M KIRKLANI) LAKE. Ont. iCl'lm lValeniine Poljakov. 28 - year - old lminer, was freed unhurt Saturday 9"" being entombed six hours by a rm-lcfali while carrying enough dynamite to blast a city block. p Officials of Sylvanite mine said :a cailvas bag containing the zoo lll.VllHmIie sticks and fuses may have saved his life. Pnliakov was freed by a 72-man 'rescue team which scraped away the ore and muck Covering him jiriih their hands. All ihc time the irescilors could see the light on the ztmllllcd mint-r's helmet and were liable to talk in him. Poijakov had returncil with the Mindanao island. The first Jolt came at 1'40 a.m. l2:40 p.m. Sunday EST. Philippine news service said it was almost as strong as the big April 1 quake-magnitude 6 or 7 on a scale of ii). No casualties were reported. lthe 26-tun Irma. were unable to. elaborate on the men's experi- they had irowa in land. 1 As Mrs. llatiicld prepared to go after the men she said she know inothing of their experiences ex- cept that they were sale. Aboard the ship besides owner-l Captain Hatfield, 47. were his. l Macl(innon wasl Isabel- Watts of Charlottetown. who pre- Surviving iner' Escapes Rockfall A cousin. Ferdinand Lloyd, 45; Ali- brey Nicllerson. 21. Amos Boucller and Grant Low. -EXPERIENCED FISHERMEN All are married except Boucher and all are experienced fisher- imen. The lrnia was reported overdue after she failed to return to Port Attlee Due At Montreal Today OTTAWA (CP)-British Labor Leader Clement Alilce will or- rive hy air at Montreal today for an iii-flay cross-Canada speak- ing tour. He is expected to talk entirely on international affairs. His visit has been arrnngerl by the CCF and he will be met on arrival by' CCF leader M. .f. Coldivell. Lorne lngie, CCF na- .iional sccrelary. will travel with Mr. Attlce during his Canadian tour. Tile former British prime min- ister will make his first public address at Port Arthur, Ont, on Tuesday. From there he goes to Regina Wednesday. Calgary Thursday and Vancouver Satur- riav. him i he and a partner had been work- lllil. As soon as he stepped onto "1? "luck if Bare way. lie was quickly sucked in ilniil his head Alfio Corvina. his iner. rushed for help. After two hours of digging. Poi- .lakav's head was freed. It took an- other four hours to release him. working part- blil Pflllakov was carrying acted as a cushion against the weight ofi said there was no immediate dan- Rcr oflan explosion as dynamite; can withstand up to in pounds ilressiire before exploding. Mine officials said the dynamite, 9D-Year-Old Ottawa Destroyed By Fire p OTTAWA (CPl -' Chalmers United Church. its 90th anniver- lsary but a week away. was swept by Ii fire less than three hours before Sunday eveningis Easter Sunday service was to begin. The fire department said it feared the building worth possibly between S30(i.f)tl(l and S-i00,000, would be a total loss. An elder collapsed and died when .he arrived at the Church for the lscrvice and found fire raging lihroilgh a large section of it. pTwelve firemen were sent to hos- .plidl for treatment when overcome by smoke. Alex W. MacDonald. an elder in the church that was to have cele- hratcd its 90th aniversary ncxt000 lsunday. w a s stricken he lwatched firemen battling t h e zflames. He died of a heart attack. Four hours after the fire was Bl-llll.lN tAPl- A Russian icon- ager. failed for three weeks by American officials as an anti- Communist dcfcctnr. voluntarily -J30 07 9Xi)losives to a slope where returned to his parents Saturday. but he refused all their entreaties spouting Soiict Hogans. Vnlcry Lyslknv. son of a Soviet liculcnnni -colonel, was reunited with his father and mother at- was covered with two feet of ore. U. S. high commission headquar- BECAME MOODY , llcrs here. He hugged and kissed lihcm. whispered in his mother's car. and was promptly whisked to East Berlin. The four-minute ceremony was the climax to a strange story that aroused the Soviet Union in thel point where Foreign Minister Mol- ihe ore and helped save him, Thcy'nlov personally intcrvencd with a- dcmnnd for the boy's return. charging the Americans would not let him go. Lysikoi. admittedly in trouble in Gives Easter Blessing To Throng By STAN IWINTON VATXCAN CITY (AP) The Pope gave his Easter blessing Sunday to peaceful uses of atomic power and the better world they promise. The white-clad splritiial leader of the Roman Catholic world said he watched recent scientific ad- vances in the field of nuclear energy "without fear or trepida- tion” A tremendous throng-one Vat- ican official called it the great- est in history-jammed the great are of St. Peter's and spill- aufar down the "way of the con- ciliation" which leads to it. The number was so vast police said accurate estimates were impos- sible-guesses ranged from IN).- lm up to 500,000. The speech was rebroadcast in Canada later in the CH of the CBC French aet- wch. he babble of strand! Mam- came to a half as to parish church. St. iialre, 75 miles south of Quebec l:.";'.,"..""..,.'., M. appeared on otsr.wsssiiewboialiI dsys.(a?Photol. nu!-and Pour fil .ence's advances in the nuclear VOICE STRONG The Pope's voice was strong. although he coughed once. He gestured widely and with vigor His whole ” emphasized the degree of his recovery from the desperate illness which im- Derilled his life last winter. The Pope emphasized his faith the ultimate benefit of aci- .ieid. He also siressd the den- gers. said the pope: "The dangers. which the s ' of genetics fore- sees as possible, when that mys- terious something which is deep down in every living thing. is handled recklessly. or habitat by a cause such as. for example, an increased radioactivity in the face of a yet unknown margin of biological security. The bar- rors of monstrous offspring. and W0"! ll-ill. blddu shocks then give indication at the N- rolt of nature Iuiast each vie- ence." the caneedtoparentlalguamwpnldattaiaed antees" of peace; gave his bles- sings to "those who for their loyalty to Christ and the church are suffering persecution” an ap- parent reference to Roman Cath- olics in those iron Curtain and other countries where there is pressure against their faith: and blessed those "sincerely prepar- ed to reach a lasting understand- ing so they may throughout the world arrange treaties which will ensure peace. start a progressive dlsarrnament and thus spare hu- 'r the destruction of a new war." He concluded with his blessing to Rome and the world. But the heart of the Popels essage dwelt on the peaceful uses of atomic power. "We are well aware how much greater and more important con- trol over the lives of peoples and their political activity is being by scientific research. and we bless the band who has turned the minds of men to more genus counsels at peace." be lldtadelhmuan-aall. Pope Views A-Power Without Fear "Without fear of iripldntion. we have noted the recent advances which. after some definite pro- gress. have successfuiry complet- ed the first attempt to propel a ship by means of nuclear energy. at last putting that force to the service. and not to the destruc- tion of man. ACQUIRE GREATER CONTROL "We cannot but hope and pray that man may have those ener- gies increasingly at his disposal. and acquire A greater and great- er control over them. We know how long and difficult. how ard- uous and dangerous is such re- search. "But we exhort men of science and of good will to persevere llflrely and confidently is their theoretical and experimental study of the instruments and the pro- acceselhleenerl!.wbtchmeybe wttaaeawhu-eltlsaeeih ed. aadeontrtbnte to the lessee- llll of the pressures at west and liq.” - iRed Teen-ager Escapes To West; Changes Mind If the president is convinced. however. that an assault on Que- lmoy and the Maisus is the begin- lning of a massive effort to take Formosa. American forces would move into action with tactical. Ismail-size atomic weapdns, There would be no employment Church At discovered. it still burned out of control. The interior of the main section of the church was heavily damaged by smoke and water. LARGE CONGREGATION The fire is believed to have started in the basement of the huge stone church in downtown Ottawa. its congregation of more than 2.- 000 made it one of the capital's largest. Rev. A. Leonard Griffith, pastor at the church for the last five years. watched his church burn. Mrs. Griffith. said the 90th an- niversary of the church was to have been celebrated next Sunday. Chalmers had the largest pipe or- gan in the capital. valued at 362.- A huge crowd gathered. many of whom, uninformed of the fire, lhad intended to worship in the church Sunday night. .his school at Soviet headquarters in East Berlin. crossed into the U. S. sector March iii. A week later. his parents came to see him to return to them. He claimed he could not stand communism any- more becaicse it taught ”hatred of other people.” I . U. S. high commissioner James B. Conant refused Soviet high' ccmmissioner Georgi M. Push- kin's demand for return of the boy. whom the Russians called ”immniure" Molotov took it up .with Ambassador Charles E. Boh- lien in Moscow. . American ”psyi-holngical war- lfare" people held Lysikov in ll-lrankfiiri. lnnk him around to see lhis pct suiuccts. airplanes and automobiles. got him to broadcast nnti-Soviet speeches on the Voice of America. gave him a ride on a Rhine river boat. squlrerl him to teen-age dances and to s Marilyn Monroe movie. He became moody April 2. After he was shown the text of a radio Moscow charge that he had been held by the Americans against his will. he expressed concern for the welfare of his parents. His father is Lt.-Col. Alexander Lysikov. as- signed to a Soviet air transport regiment outside Berlin. On April 5 he was allowed to write a letter to the Soviet mil- itery mission asking for the right to return. The state department in Washington agreed and the high . mmission here emphasl d that was free to receive asylum in the West. He was flown to Berlin Fri- day night for Saturday's reunion. PLAT! NEW suaulta TORONTO iCPi-Plans for a 350,000.00!) residential development of 1.500 homes in suburban Scar- borough township were reveal Saturday. covering 500 acres. will centre on the Guild of All Arts fan. a resort overlookinl Lake on the Qlnl:-CI1 out- IIIOUDPOI I150. . the subdivision will have a population of 0,000 within six are. living h homes -. so Lysikov was free to go just as he 56 Missing Hunter ST. JOHN'S. NFLD. (CPl--The RCMP said here Saturday that a search for a missing west coast rabbit hunter has been call- ed qff. Lawrence Preyshon left his Fist Bay home March 11 with a 10-day food supply and has not returned. Volunteer search parties comb- ed the forests near his home for a week without finding the hunter. A FAMILIAR ROLE LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP:-Am tress Arline Judge. 43. was mar- ried Saiurday for the seventh time. She and Edward Cooper Heard. 40. Beverly Hills, Ceiif.. b sinessman. were wed in the chapel of the Flamingo hotel. it was his second marriage. She has two sons. Wesley Ruggles Jr.. 21. and Dan Topping Jr.. 16. MANY M liv-ii-DATE GIRL is AWAY BEHIND lti HER I TORONTO iCP)eMinimum and maximum temperatures: Min. Mas. Dawson . . 3 M Vancouver .... 42 51 Victoria 40 50 Ed .onton 33 Si Calgary .. 33 39 Regina 44 62 Winnipeg .. 04 76 Toronto 50 71 Ottawa 35 65 Montreal 3.1 5!! Quebec ZR 48 Fredericton - 30 Si Saint John . . 2H 47 Moncton N 42 Halifax . 31 3'7 Charlottetown 25 40 Sydney 27 40 Yarmouih . . Hi 52 St. John's. Nil 25 .12 HALIFAX (CPI-The Domminn weather office here says Easter was dull and chilly in the Marl- times and Newfoundland. Clearing is spreading eastward across the Maritimes and today is forecast to be sunny in all regions. However the very warm air is expected to remain south of the district. Regional Forecasts: Northern Nova Scotia: Sunny and much milder: light winds. Low-high at New Glasgow 82 and Prince unis Island and New Braaswick: ar with a few eleedy Intervals: little ehalle h an of Fundy: Northwest wins. ed 15: clear with a few timid! W0!" vals: visibility 10 miles; little change In temperature. tide today at Charlotte- at 1.34 a. in. and 12.21 p. n. erside tide eighteen rain- llar than Charlottetown. rise: at 517 e. n. and sets town eoetinl h 3.0M. ettlpn.